and while faisal knew about the sykes/picoult treaty, no other arab leaders did. so lawrence increasingly felt this incredible moral conflict between the men he was recruiting to fight for him and die for him were most likely going to be betrayed in the end. and as the war went on, he became more and more, i don't know, 'em bittered, shattered. he called himself a charlatan, a fraud because he was getting, he was getting people to fight and die for a cause that he knew was a lie. this was a -- lawrence was also a pretty amazing photographer. this was a photo he took when he first got to arabia, and it's of the rebel camp in the early morning. i was just going to show -- and this was the rebel army on the move. you can't see it, but kind of right at the center is faisal leading the army, and lawrence was standing up on a little prommen story to take the picture. what both faisal and lawrence were also really brilliant at was understanding that to wage this -- because of the clan and tribal structure of war, well, of the society in arabia, to wage war it was this ve